v xtitl ZEBULON RECORD VOLUME 38. NUMBER 25. ZEBULON. N. C., JUNE 20. 1963 Registration Heavy For Vote June 29 On School Merger REGISTERING . . . Walter A. Perry, top photo, 83-year-old Route 4, Zebulon, was one of the oldest persons to register for the school consolidation referendum to be held Saturday, June 29. In the second photo, Nelia (Mrs. Lorenzo) Bunn of Route 3, Zebulon, and in the lower photo J. Harvey Parrish registers. Mrs. Evelyn Creech is the registrar. Potter Patter Believes Comprehensive Hi Would Help Community Grow Opponents of the comprehensive high school for eastern Wake County keep telling me' about the Wakelon graduates who have made their mark in the world. The first names mentioned are usually Dr. Charles Flowers, Jr., E. C. Daniel, Jr., and R. H. Brant ley, Jr. Make no mistake about it, I respect these gentlemen for their accomplishments in their chosen fields. I would like very much to see them return to Zeb ulon and rear their fine children here. These men and their wives know the value of education, and I think they would lend their tal ents to the fight for better schools in eastern Wake County—if only they lived here. Unfortunately for our community, >most of Wakelon’s outstanding graduates have chosen to seek their fortunes in other cities or states, and we are left to build the future of our town without their help. You and I are now responsible for the education of the children who will bring honor to our town in the decades which lie ahead. How well are we meeting that re sponsibility? Thirty years ago nearly every college had its “high school de partment” which offered courses needed by students who either did not finish high school or grad uated from substandard schools. Until just recently most colleges offered “refresher” or “remedial” or “non-credit” courses in math and English for students who were not ready for regular fresh man work in these two subjects— but no more. As Chancellor John Caldwell told State College alum ni at a dinner meeting in Wendell last year, scientific knowledge is expanding so rapidly and operat ing costs are increasing so much that colleges can no longer afford to use classrooms and faculty to teach high school courses. If a student is not adequately prepar ed, he must attend a junior col lege in order to make up deficien cies. Some junior college courses will not be accepted for college credit at major institutions; oth ers will be accepted, but an A earned at the junior college will be transferred as a C. The stu dent is thus handicapped by a loss of quality points if and when he is able to arrange a transfer. Kecentiy someone was telling me about a fine young Wakelon graduate who dropped out of a college far less demanding than State, Wake Forest, Carolina, or Duke. “I simply don’t understand it,” my informant commented, “because she always made excel lent grades at Wakelon.” This incident reminds me of something which happened while I was a freshman at Meredith Col lege. In one of my classes there was a very intelligent girl who had never made anything below an A in the small high school she attended. Naturally I was shocked to learn that she was failing two of her courses and barely passing most of the other subjects. Talk ing with her I realized that she had never really learned how to study independently. She had al ways been the brightest student in her class without doing much homework; but at Meredith she was seeing others excel while she could not keep up. This had com pletely crushed her self-confi dence, and she was planning to leave school at the end of the se mester. Fortunately a wise facul ty advisor was able to convince her (Continued on Page 7) Faster Service Five Negroes Register Patrons of the Wakelon School district turned out in record num bers by placing their names on the new registration book re quired for voters to cast a ballot on the consolidation of four high schools into one comprehensive high school. Mrs. Evelyn Creech, registrar, reported that 1,060 persons in the Wakelon district registered and will be qualified and eligible to vote in the June 29 referendum. The largest number of persons registered Saturday, the last day for registration. Vote on the consolidation issue will be held at Wakelon School. Registrars from the other three school districts reported their totals. Mrs. Margaret Todd of Wendell, 884; Mrs. L. E. Flowers of Knightdale, 607; and Mrs. Co ley Barham of Rolesville, 419. Five Negroes registered in the Wakelon district, Mrs. Creech said. Registrars from the three other districts reported they had no Negroes to register. r Hospital Notes The following were patients at Wendell-Zebulon Hospital Wed nesday morning. White Joyce Creech, Sandra Bissette, Ruth Moss, Lavonia Long, Lucille Taylor, Zoma Price, Blonnie Wil liams, John Davis, Cecil Batche lor, Jr., Lee BTantley, Percy Ward, William Bunn, Henry Brown, Har ry Bissette, Ernest MofTitt, Bur nice Smith and Jesse Adams. Colored Blanche Perkins. White Birth Mr. and Mrs. Stacy M. Creech of Wendell announce the birth of a daughter on June 17. Mrs. Creech is the former Linda Joyce Johnston of Wendell. Shriners Told of New Program Being Launched For Children The Shrine Imperial Council session which met in Toronto, Canada, has authorized the con struction of three hospitals in North America for the treatment of burns, the local Shrine club was told last week. The local club, newly organized, met for its first meeting. Dis tinguished guests from the Shrine and ladies were also present. Three hospitals will be solely for the treatment of bums, and will be in the main for the un derprivileged child regardless of race, creed, or color, Samuel Toler, president of the Southeastern Shrine Association and past po tentate of the Shrine. * The hospitals will cost a total of $10 million. At present only one site has been selected, the speaker said. This site is in the Boston, Mass., area. Toler said the Shrine is hope ful of having one of the hospitals built in North Carolina. A com mittee of the Imperial Council has been to North Carolina and made a survey. The decision will come some time in July. There is only one hospital which treats bums exclusively and that hospital is located in Texas, the speaker said. ioier said the program is handi capped because of the lack of phy sicians for the treatment of burns. He said this is the first organi zation to start an orthopedic pro gram. Nelson Banks, Recorder, gave a brief history of Shrinedom. The organization is 90 years old, he said, and was founded by Dr. Walter Fleming and Billy Flor ence, an actor. The first Temple, Mecca, was founded in New York. The major program sponsored by Shriners are crippled children’s hospitals. Banks told of the way the hospitals began. The idea was born on a hot night in Atlanta, Ga., and the first hospital was opened in 1922 in Shreveport, La. Today there are 17 hospitals for ministering to crippled children in North America. The United States has 13; Mexico, 1; and Hawaii, 2. 'jver juujuuu ooys ana gins wno have passed through these doors have been made physically whole again. Banks said there are 850,000 wearers of the Fez in the 168 Tem ples in the North American conti nent. There are 7,100 Fez wear ers in the Sudan Temple, founded (Continued on Page 7) Post Office Gets ZIP Code Our five digit ZIP Code is 27597, Postmaster Ruby M. Daw son announced today. “Everyone in Zebulon will use this ZIP Code on all their corre spondence to speed mail deliveries and reduce the chance of mis-sent mail,” Postmaster Dawson said. ZIP Code, the Post Office De partment’s revolutionary new sys tem of improved mail dispatch and delivery, goes into effect nation ally on July 1. Postmaster Dawson stressed the importance of all citizens of Zebu Ion learning this city’s ZIP Code and using it in their return ad dress on all correspondence. In an swering mail, she said, ZIP Codes taken from return addresses on incoming mail should be used. “The ZIP Code is literally the last word in mail addressing” Miss Dawson said. “It should fol low the city and state in ad dresses.” She cited this example of the proper use of ZIP Code: Ruby M. Dawson Postmaster | U. S. Post Office, Zebulon, North Carolina 27597 The new ZIP Code plan, Miss Dawson said, for the first time will permit the Post Office De partment to short-cut repeated address reading. "The address on mail must of ten be read as many as eight or ten times by postal employees, to get it to the proper destination,” Miss Dawson said. “Each hand ling slows the process of mail dis patch and adds to the opportunity of human error.” “With ZIP Code, a clerk needs only to glance at the code to know immediatey to what national area, state and post office the letter is destined, and to speed it on its way, cutting up to 24 hours off the time between deposit and de livery.” Postmaster Dawson said that when ZIP Code is in full swing, the UNITED STATES will have “the most modern system of mail distribution and delivery la ex istence.”